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About a week and a half ago, two candidates in an Oregon
congressional race held a rare joint press conference. What brought them
together was a sudden deluge of undisclosed spending to benefit one of
their opponents, state Rep. Maxine Dexter, who by that point had been
trailing in both fundraising and name recognition. But now millions of
dollars were coming seemingly out of nowhere to lift her up, and the two
candidates – Susheela Jayapal and Eddy Morales – were urging the press
corps to find out who was cutting the checks.
At a candidate debate not long after, Dexter professed total
ignorance. She had no earthly idea where all the money was coming from,
she said. But when pressed if it was Big Pharma money, she said it was
“absolutely not.” The swiftness and the certainty of the answer raised
eyebrows. If you don’t know where it’s coming from, how do you know
where it’s not coming from?
I had already been poking around about the source of the money by the
time of that press conference, because it looked like something unusual
was going on. Random state representatives don’t generally find
themselves on the winning end of multimillion dollar Super PAC spending
for no reason.
And Susheela Jayapal is the older sister of Pramila Jayapal, one of
AIPAC’s most concerted adversaries on Capitol Hill and the powerful
chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. AIPAC had been
unsuccessfully recruiting a challenger to her in Seattle. In early
December, Jewish Insider, which closely covers congressional primaries
with an Israel–Palestine lens, flagged
Susheela Jayapal’s candidacy as “alarming” to Israel advocates,
elevating the potential candidacy of Dexter as a strong opponent.
After a few days of reporting, I found two sources who had knowledge
of how specifically AIPAC had begun playing in the race without
disclosing its role: It was routing money through a “pro-science” Super
PAC called 314 Action Fund. I published that story last Friday.
Jayapal is now staring down the barrel of millions in spending
against her, yet progressive groups and aligned politicians haven’t come
to the rescue, as they have in some previous races. Bernie Sanders and
Squad members without competitive primaries are sitting on millions of
dollars in cash on hand. Sanders, who is a lock for reelection and is
holding onto nearly $10 million, previously declared a “war” with AIPAC.
He has endorsed Jayapal and sent a fundraising email on her behalf, but
that’s nothing compared to AIPAC’s millions. AOC is the only Squad
member who has yet to endorse in the race. The election is just over a
week away, on May 21.
The Portland Mercury did some strong follow-up reporting
on the race this past week, but Dexter continued to profess ignorance.
But then undeniable pieces of evidence began to emerge. On Thursday,
Dexter was required to disclose donors from a May 7 fundraiser. We
analyzed those donors’ giving history and found that nearly 90 percent
of them had also given directly to AIPAC or its super PAC. I got one of
the donors on the phone, and she didn’t even know about the fundraiser
and didn’t remember donating $3,300 to Dexter just days earlier. When I
noted it was reported in Federal Election Commission filings, she told
me: “I give all my contributions through AIPAC. Whenever I am asked to
give to their endorsed candidates I give.”
The next day Dexter disclosed having raised nearly $600,000 in the
month of April, after raising just north of $300,000 during her entire
campaign before that. Doubling or tripling your fundraising in the last
few weeks of the race is not typical. And inside that $600,000 were
scores of additional AIPAC donors.
If that wasn’t enough to put the pieces together, a staffer at 314
Action — angry that a PAC ostensibly dedicated to electing candidates
with a science background was having its mission distorted to support
pro-Israel candidates — told me directly about the nature of the
AIPAC-driven operation.
314 Action Fund didn’t respond to a request for comment last week,
and also didn’t respond yesterday. Instead, four minutes before we
posted our story, 314 took to Twitter
(you can call it X if you want; I’m not) to say I am “once again making
up stories out of thin air.” Not responding to a request for comment
and instead tweeting through it is not the typical behavior of article
subjects. In any event, you can read the full story here.
My colleague Akela Lacy, who helped me report that story, also has a good one out today on the very weird Maryland congressional race,
where AIPAC is backing local legislator Sarah Elfreth in a race whose
most high-profile candidate is Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn, a
Democratic hero for his defense of the Capitol on January 6 and
subsequent public testimony against Donald Trump.
314 Action is playing an odd role in this race, too. After I
published my first story on the Jayapal race, 314 endorsed Dunn over
Elfreth, putting the PAC on the opposite side of AIPAC. Yet, as the American Prospect noticed,
several of the major AIPAC donors to Dexter are also major donors to
Elfreth, while 314 is not spending any money to support Dunn. It’s all a
big game.
Meanwhile, it’s been nearly a week since food or water has been able
to get into Rafah, and people there are facing the very real risk of
dying of thirst, if they aren’t already.
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